Lord of the Rings actor reveals why Urak-hai knows what a menu is

Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
(Image credit: New Line)

“Looks like meat’s back on the menu, boys!” The line has gone down as one of the most iconic from the Lord of the Rings trilogy, not only because it's downright fun to say out loud, but the fact that the Uruk-Hai know what the word "menu" is quite funny in itself – do they have restaurants at Sauron's tower?

In a recent interview, Lord of the Rings alumni Stephen Ure and Jed Brophy revealed the origins of that specific line created, which was said during The Two Towers.

"There's a lot of stuff that doesn't really make sense. Of course, they wouldn't know what a menu was," Ure, who played various orcs and Urak-hai in the series, told Thrillist. "You're not going to start debating the writing because maybe then they are going to run away and rewrite it, and then you are going to be sitting there in all that stuff. Really, at the end of the day, you just want it to be over and get out of that stuff. I had no idea that this scene had become so famous. There's a lot of clunky things in there."

According to Ure, the line may have come from one of the four co-writers on The Two Towers, Phillippa Boyens. He went on to back up his speculation by saying: "She puts all this stuff in there that doesn't make sense."

"She was taken on board because she was the Tolkien expert," he said. "I can tell the lines that Philippa wrote. Like in the third film where I'm playing Gorbag, and when I finally come up from the big Orc fight that starts over the Mithril vest, and I'm going to kill Elijah [Wood as Frodo], and say, 'I'm going to bleed you like a stuck pig."

It sounds like the likelihood of the line coming from the pen of Boyens is quite possible, but what we know for sure is that it's an iconic line and moment from the trilogy. Now that there is a Lord of the Rings TV series on the way, there will be new entries in memeable lines from Tolkien's universe. 

The Lord of the Rings by author and scholar J.R.R. Tolkien is one of the best-selling books ever written, with over 150 million books sold. For the last two decades, the trilogy of films based on his works has helped keep his stories alive. Fans have furthered those efforts by creating memes featuring some of the more memorable lines from the films. For more, check out everything we know so fat about the Lord of the Rings TV show.

Stephanie is a comic book historian and pop culture critic for publications including SYFYFANGRRLS, Marvel, The A.V. Club, Nerdist, Den of Geek, and Rotten Tomatoes. Stephanie is also a comic creator with three ongoing webcomics, Parenthood Activate!, But What If Though?, and Living Heroes. She made her Marvel debut with a short story featuring Monica Rambeau in Marvel’s Voices: Legacy. She recently made her DC Comics debut in Wonder Woman Black and Gold #2 and is co-writing the Nubia and the Amazons miniseries.

Read more
Helm Hammerhand and his family in the throne room during the upcoming movie, Lord of the Rings: War of the Rohirrim.
If you squint, those Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim cameos work surprisingly well in Tolkien lore
Wallace, Gromit, and Norbot in Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
One scene from Wallace and Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl was inspired by Lord of the Rings, but it's so subtle, fans may not have noticed
Frodo and Sam in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
24 years later, fans are still spotting the incredible, "unmatched" attention to detail in Lord of the Rings
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Peter Jackson reveals his favorite movie in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and it's not the one you're probably expecting
The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Lord of the Rings anime movie actor "squealed" when she noticed an "insanely exciting" Easter egg in the War of the Rohirrim script
The Matrix
32 movies that spawned iconic internet memes
Latest in Fantasy Movies
Charli XCX
Charlie XCX is in talks to star in Greta Gerwig’s The Chronicles of Narnia movie - and that is so Brat
Milla Jovovich in In the Lost Lands
Game of Thrones writer George R.R. Martin's In The Lost Lands could get an on-screen sequel, and Martin is apparently keen too
Dave Bautista in In the Lost Lands
Dave Bautista says playing a vampire is "at the top of my list" after starring in Resident Evil director’s werewolf fantasy In the Lost Lands
Sean Astin and Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings
Lord of the Rings star Elijah Wood gives unexpected answer on what movie should be removed from cinematic history: "There's nothing pure about it"
Dave Bautista in In the Lost Lands
Dave Bautista says "I always look to Clint Eastwood" when approaching a western role: "He's always going to be my gold standard"
Dave Bautista and Milla Jovovich in In the Lost Lands
After the successes of Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon, Dave Bautista and Milla Jovovich talk pressures of starring in the first George R.R. Martin movie
Latest in News
Balatro
Balatro creator started "properly playing the game myself about a week before launch" and had "a pretty emotional moment" where he realized it's "actually fun"
Death Stranding 2 Collector's Edition
Hideo Kojima reveals Death Stranding 2: On the Beach release date, and the Collector's Edition includes exactly what I predicted it would
Kingmakers
Kingmakers is a strategy game about taking on medieval armies with a gun, but its devs thought the giant mech was too much
The Witcher 3 lead says "not many games" were trying to match the RPG back in 2015, and that meant "there was a risk" to making it in the first place
The Blood of Dawnwalker
The Witcher 3 dev says his new vampire RPG Blood of Dawnwalker wants to challenge genre conventions, but only if "we're changing them to actually achieve some goal"
Daredevil recap: The Defenders
Marvel fans are discussing which of the Netflix series characters would have survived the Blip